Dress code remains unchanged
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Mike Swanson
The Huntington Beach Union High School District will not change its
dress code policy to allow for religious expression, the board of
trustees decided Tuesday night.
Trustee Matthew Harper suggested changing the policy after 13
Fountain Valley High School students, assembled in two groups, were
stopped from spelling out “Jesus {heart} U” and “Jesus is the Way”
for their senior yearbook photo in October. Eleven of the students
walked out of the picture when told by the vice principal to either
scatter or turn their shirts inside out. The board also ruled Tuesday
that the yearbook photo could not be re-taken.
“I may be a young adult, but I do know right from wrong, and what
was done to us was wrong,” said Fountain Valley High School senior
Katie Agbulos, who was among nine who formed “Jesus {heart} U” in the
front row of the picture.
About 20 attendees spoke at the meeting Tuesday, trading comments
that centered upon students’ freedom of expression and concerns that
religion might take a front-row seat in a public school.
Supt. Van Riley wrote a memo to the board before the meeting
suggesting that it make no additions to the board’s dress code
policy, adding that he supported the administration’s actions against
the students.
“The administration’s actions were not directed at any particular
religious group,” Riley wrote. “If a banner or slogan reading, ‘There
is no God’ or ‘Allah is great’ were displayed, similar actions would
have been taken.... This picture is meant as a public historical
document of the senior class, and not as a religious, political, or
commercial opportunity.”
The board voted 4 to 1 against adding a revision to its policy
that Harper said would clarify that students could form religious
messages in yearbook photos. Harper, who gave the only vote for the
policy change, believed administration acted improperly even without
the revision. The students violated nothing set out in the
administration’s regulations, Harper said, and he believed students
wishing to express themselves in the future could use some ammunition
to back their actions.
Harper suggested the policy be revised to read: “The Huntington
Beach Union High School District shall not restrict students from
wearing clothing that is worn in response to, and as a physical
expression of, a sincerely held religious belief. Such clothing
includes, but is not limited to, headwear, jewelry, and clothing with
religious text or symbols.”
Board member Susan Henry seconded Harper’s motion for the sake of
discussion, but said there’s nothing in the board’s existing policy
that establishes what students are allowed to wear, and she didn’t
want that to change.
“If we start listing what they may wear, we’re going to need a
much bigger book,” Henry said.
The group expression is what made board member Brian Garland
support administration’s decision. Students could wear clothing
displaying religious messages, Garland said, but he didn’t think they
should be allowed to form a message that attracts attention to itself
and away from other students.
“It’s a bit disingenuous of people to suggest that we’re against
their message,” Garland said. “It’s the forum we’re questioning.”
Four of the students who walked out of the photo spoke at the
meeting, all of whom said they were merely expressing a deeply felt
belief in a country that they felt allowed them to do so.
“We walk by faith, not by sight,” senior Alex Lopez said.
“Persecution is a blessing.”
One of two seniors who spoke against the 13 students’ message said
he didn’t think administration should allow students to form what
appears to be an endorsement of their religion in a class photo
featuring students of varying beliefs. Joe McReynolds compared the
incident to his experience as a freshman of listening to a biology
teacher denouncing evolution and preaching abstinence to his class.
“I don’t think that it shows respect to show that you believe your
faith is right,” Joe said.
The board also voted 4-1 against re-taking the senior photo with
the 13 students in question allowing to wear their letter-bearing
shirts again.
Harper wanted to have both issues taken care of on the board to
avoid possibly moving the issue into a larger forum that’s out of the
board’s hands.
“Who knows what a court will decide, but we can decide as a board,
and I think that’s the right decision,” Harper said.
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